Texas Border Business
By Roberto Hugo González
In the fast-moving world of global trade, where seconds count and margins are razor-thin, Carlos Canales is building something exceptional: a cross-border logistics empire that quietly powers the shelves of America’s largest retailers and keeps products moving efficiently between two nations. As the founder and CEO of TCA Logistics, Canales has established a state-of-the-art operation in the heart of the Rio Grande Valley— one that is as technologically advanced as it is operationally sophisticated. His vision is clear: to serve as the backbone for national and international producers of food, medical supplies, and technology as they navigate one of the busiest trade corridors in the world.

“What we’re doing here is more than warehousing,” says Canales, standing in one of his warehouses overlooking the expansive 310,000-square-foot complex. “We are engineering a logistics solution that ensures quality, compliance, and speed at every step of the supply chain.” The company’s primary facilities include 80,000 square feet dedicated to food products certified by the FDA, and an additional 50,000 square feet leased to third parties who handle tech merchandise not requiring FDA oversight. From this strategic location, TCA Logistics receives goods from Mexico and prepares them for precise, high-frequency distribution across the United States.
At the core of TCA’s operation is an elegantly structured three-step process designed to maximize freshness, reduce waste, and improve delivery efficiency. When pallets arrive from producers, they are received in full and stored as complete units. Each pallet is scanned, tracked, and logged into a sophisticated digital system that records its location, expiration date, and availability. “Inventory accuracy is non-negotiable,” Canales explains. “When handling perishable goods or high-value tech components, you have to know where everything is, down to the square inch.”
However, real innovation comes in the second phase of the process, known in the industry as picking. Here, full pallets are broken down and reassembled based on the specific needs of each store or chain. This is essential for major retailers such as Walmart, Target, and Stripes, which no longer accept bulk deliveries of a single product. Instead, they require customized loads with a variety of items, each with its expiration timeline. “Think about milk,” Canales says. “If a shopper sees two cartons with different expiration dates, they’ll always grab the one that lasts longer. If retailers don’t control for that, they end up with waste. Our picking system solves that.”
Once picked and repacked, the goods are moved to the distribution zone, where they’re staged in a U-shaped layout that allows for rapid outbound loading. This model enables TCA Logistics to move goods quickly and reduce idle time, resulting in longer shelf life for fresh items and increased retail sales potential. “We design everything with the end customer in mind,” Canales adds. “Our clients measure success in days of freshness and speed to shelf, and we help them win that race.”
TCA Logistics has made significant investments in infrastructure and automation to make this operational precision possible. Every item entering the warehouse is scanned and tracked using advanced inventory management software that knows where a product is and when it should be shipped based on proximity to expiration. High-tech forklifts imported from England, capable of operating in aisles as narrow as eight feet wide, enable dense vertical storage without compromising maneuverability. With ceilings reaching 32 feet high, the facility is designed to hold more inventory in less square footage, improving efficiency and cost per pallet.

Each section of the warehouse is color-coded and specialized for different types of products. The orange warehouse handles snacks like chips, cookies, and peanuts; the green section manages pastries and baked goods with shorter shelf life; and the yellow zone stores automotive parts such as vehicle cameras and other components manufactured in Reynosa and distributed to U.S. assembly plants. Additionally, a separate, temperature-controlled area is designated for medical supplies, including dialysis materials and sterile equipment used in hospitals. “We don’t just move goods— we handle products that require precision, sanitation, and compliance,” says Canales. “There’s no room for error in what we do.”
Canales himself is as meticulous as the systems he’s built. A natural problem-solver with a deep understanding of Mexican and American markets, he has grown TCA Logistics into a vital piece of the region’s economic infrastructure in just two years. His leadership has attracted a diverse client base that includes national food brands, multinational retailers, and tech manufacturers, all of whom rely on his team to safely, legally, and quickly transport their products across the border. “Logistics is a trust business,” he explains. “Our clients give us their most valuable inventory and expect us to treat it as our own. That’s a responsibility we take seriously.”

“There are few groups in this industry that offer everything integrated like we do— transportation, warehousing, and logistics. Because everyone offers it, but they don’t own anything. They subcontract. In our case, we know what is being offered. Since we live the day-to-day details of each business division, we can provide immediate and personalized solutions,” says Canales. Unlike many competitors who rely on fragmented outsourcing models, TCA Logistics maintains complete control over its operations. This vertical integration enables faster decision-making, greater accountability, and a level of responsiveness that is not possible when services are outsourced to third parties. It also means that clients deal with a single, deeply knowledgeable team that understands not just the logistics landscape but the specific operational nuances of their business. “Because we own the infrastructure and manage the processes ourselves, we’re able to act with urgency and precision,” Canales adds. “When an issue arises, we don’t need to make a dozen phone calls— we solve it right then and there.”

With rising demand and cross-border trade showing no signs of slowing down, Canales is already planning the next expansion phase. New facilities in key Texas cities are being planned, and the company is actively recruiting talent to support its expanding footprint. “There’s so much opportunity right now,” he says. “We’re in a constant state of optimization— adding more automation, expanding our service offering, and looking at how we can serve more producers, more efficiently.”
For Carlos Canales, logistics isn’t just a business— it’s a platform for transformation. He is building the connective tissue that allows products to move across borders, through regulation, and into the hands of consumers with speed and precision. “Everything we do is about movement— of goods, ideas, and opportunity,” he says. “If we can help companies grow, reduce waste, and serve people better, then we’re doing more than business. We’re creating value at scale.”
And with every shipment that leaves his warehouse, it’s clear that Canales and his team at TCA Logistics are not just keeping pace with the demands of modern commerce— they’re setting the standard.
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